Lundquist v. Hanson

238 N.W. 861, 205 Wis. 667, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 122
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 861 (Lundquist v. Hanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lundquist v. Hanson, 238 N.W. 861, 205 Wis. 667, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 122 (Wis. 1931).

Opinion

Nelson, J.

Alma Lundquist, aged about seventy years, died on the 17th day of July, 1930, leaving a last will and testament which, after contest, was admitted to probate. Deceased left her surviving as her sole heir at law her hus[668]*668band, Ludwig Lundquist, contestant and appellant herein. Her estate, at the time of her death, consisted of a house and about two and a half acres of land, a mortgage for approximately $6,000, and certificates of deposit aggregating the sum of about $5,000.

Her will, which was executed on the 15th day of April, 1930, omitting the first paragraph, which provided for the payment of her debts, etc., and the final paragraph, which nominated an executor, is as follows:

“Second. I give, bequeath, and devise to my husband, Ludwig Lundquist, the twenty-acre farm known as my residence (situated in the city of Glenwood, St. Croix county, Wis.) ; also all personal property that belongs to me located on said twenty acres farm to [do] I give, devise, and bequeath to my husband at the time of my death.
“Third. From the remainder of my estate, I give, devise, and bequeath to Miss Betty Hanson, daughter of Chas. Hanson of the town of Springfield, the sum of $1,500.
“Fourth. The balance of my estate both Real & Personal I give, devise, and bequeath to the Children’s Plome of the Illinois Conference of the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant of America at Princeton, Illinois.”

Probate of the will was contested on three grounds :

(1) That it was procured by the exercise of undue influence.

(2) That the deceased, at the time of the execution of the instrument, was of unsound mind and not in possession of sufficient mental capacity to make a will.

(3) That the deceased, at the time of executing the instrument and for many years prior thereto, was obsessed with insane delusions and that the making of said alleged will was governed, controlled, and influenced by said delusions, and that said alleged will is the product of said delusions, among, which was the delusion entertained by her that the brothers of her husband coveted her property, de[669]*669sired her to make a will in their favor, and that if she should will her property to her husband or permit it to go to him by force of law on her demise, his said brothers would in some manner get the property away from him even though he were given only the life estate or use therein.

Alma Lundquist intermarried with the appellant in 1896. At the time of her marriage she had no property. The deceased was, at that time, an epileptic. She continued until her death to be a typical epileptic, subject to continually recurring fits, although appellant did everything within his powér to furnish her medical care and treatment in the hope that she might be cured. She was nervous, forgetful, and ailing during much of her married life. She attributed her condition to the asserted facts that her grandfather was “awfully nervous” and that as a child she had suffered from an attack of “brain fever” which left her weak and weak-minded. She had never had her menses and was incapable of bearing children. She had a growth on the back of her neck which from time to time changed in size and appearance in recurring cycles of enlargement and subsidence. During the latter years of her life her disease had so progressed and her mental and physical condition was such that she did but very little of the everyday housework. During the last six or eight years of her life appellant himself performed nearly all of the housework, such as washing the clothes, scrubbing the floors, preparing and serving the meals. She concededly had a number of well defined delusions of which she talked at different times and at different places to her neighbors and friends who came in intimate contact with her. These were based upon hallucinations. She saw things that did not exist, occurrences that did not happen, falsely believed in states of facts that did not exist, and she could not be persuaded of the falsity of her imaginings. For many years prior to her death she had a well defined delusion based upon [670]*670an hallucination that she was pursued by a man with a butcher knife. Sometimes the man with the butcher knife, she asserted, came after her from the cellar, at other times from upstairs. On one occasion he was standing on the porch of her nephew’s home trying to get into the house. After decedent had broken her arm in May, 1927, in an attempt to escape from this man, she told her sister-in-law of the incident. On another occasion she told her of “the whole North Sea coming into her house which required her to climb up on a couch in order to escape getting wet.” She was obsessed with the notion that she had seen a coffin right in front of her on the floor of her home and she had tried to run away from it and had fallen. She reported that she had seen funeral processions come into her yard; that she visioned dead people; that for many years an apparition, which she thought was God, consistently followed her because, as she averred, she had dishonestly retained too much change that a certain merchant had mistakenly given her at a time when she purchased a dress. She also had hallucinations as to imaginary men fighting. She appeared to see them on several occasions. At different times she claimed that the pictures on the wall moved; that a picture of the Christ dropped blood; that her mother had appeared to her and had confessed that she had not done the right thing while living. Deceased sometimes talked to herself and seemed to engage in conversations with unseen persons when she was alone. She gave expression to the notion that her neighbors were bad neighbors and bothered her by hanging around her home at night and by ordering her and her husband to move from their home. At another time she told of a black face which peered at her through the windows.

The record further reveals that, for many years, she harbored feelings of hatred for appellant’s two brothers who resided in Chicago, both of whom had had almost no per[671]*671sonal contact with the deceased or appellant during their married life. To a considerable number of the witnesses she expressed her dislike of these brothers, to others she expressed the same hatred coupled with the assertion that they would never get any of her property and never should have any of appellant’s property. To some she asserted as a fact, contrary to all reasonable probabilities and to all positive testimony on the subject, that the brothers of her husband had requested and desired that she make a will in their favor. To several she expressed the fear that if she left her property to her husband his brothers would coax it away from him or in some manner get it away from him. She could not be convinced that if she left her property to her husband for life with remainder over to the Children’s Home, the Children’s Home would ultimately get it. She was obsessed with the idea that if she left her property even to her husband for life his brothers would get it in some manner. The length to which her unreasonable hatred moved her is illustrated by the following incident: In 1928 one of the brothers sent a Christmas package to them. Deceased would not permit her husband to bring it into the house, but compelled him to return it unopened to the sender.

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Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 861, 205 Wis. 667, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lundquist-v-hanson-wis-1931.